
I asked Jen to tell us about herself and her experience with the quilt walk.  Here is what she had to say.  
"Normally my sister Jody Ray and I both teach at Quilt Walk and treat 
it as a girl's weekend. Last summer however my husband was in-country 
(he lives in Mozambique, Africa) and I wanted him to go to Panguitch 
with me. I'm sure the town will never be the same again! On the day I 
taught class my sister brought in her sewing machine and worked all 
day on a project of her own. This left my husband to roam the town 
getting to know shopkeepers, residents and visitors. He can be a bit 
of a trouble maker and from his telling, instigated a heated debate 
about rugby in one shop. The next day I sewed while my sister taught 
and we sent my husband fishing up at the lake. About the time he got 
his line in the water it started BLIZZARDING! He fished from the car 
until he couldn't see his line in the water for the snow then packed 
it in and drove down a very snowy road back to town. As he tells it -- 
"the girls go off to a relaxing day of quilting and say 'here Honey, 
go play with the fish in a blizzard!'" He'd like to come back to 
Panguitch with us girls this year but is hard at work in Mozambique. I 
am preparing to leave early in April to visit him and will be rushing 
back just in time to teach in one of my favorite places -- Panguitch!"
 (Yes the Quilt Walk is the second week of June, remember the lake is pretty high altitude)

Remember the Pineapple is a sign of hospitality.

Who doesn't need a butterfly quilt in their collection.  I would have a hard time keeping this at my house as I can tell it would be a granddaughter favorite.  I will have to make it multiple times. 
Jen says,,"About me: the most interesting tidbit probably is that our family 
spans 5 continents. I have a husband, 4 children, 3 step-children and 
6 grandchildren. I've had more pages added to my passport twice and 
it's nearly full again. My kids think my occupation should say 
'Traveling Gogo' (Gogo is what my grandkids call me; it means 'revered 
older woman' in Zulu). I am currently teaching a class called 'Love 
Letters from the Civil War' at Salt Lake's newest quilt shop - My 
Sister's Quilts. I am also starting a monthly class there called 
'Table Topics' in May but my sister will be teaching the first one for 
me as I will be overseas. I am taking a sabbatical from long-arm 
quilting for the summer and trying to get caught up on some of my own quilting."

This quilt, unique to whom ever it is made for was taught last year at the festival by Jen.
